Old School Wednesdays is a weekly Book Smugglers feature. We came up with the idea towards the end of 2012, when both Ana and Thea were feeling exhausted from the never-ending inundation of New and Shiny (and often over-hyped) books. What better way to snap out of a reading fugue than to take a mini-vacation into the past?

Inspired by the results of our March Old School Wednesdays Idea Poll, starting in March of 2015, Thea is rereading one of her favorite series’ of all time: The Dark Tower by Stephen King. Every second Wednesday of the month, the next book in the Dark Tower cycle will be reviewed and discussed here. All readers – those new to the Dark Tower, and those who have traveled the path before – are welcome to join the ka tet!

The journey back to Mid-World, to the dead and poisoned lands beyond continues here with The Waste Lands (Dark Tower 3).

Roland continues his quest for the Dark Tower, but he is no longer alone. He has trained Eddie and Susannah—who entered Mid-World from their separate whens in New York City in The Drawing of the Three—in the old ways of the gunslingers. But their ka-tet is not yet complete. Another must be drawn from New York into Mid-World, someone who has been there before, a boy who has died not once but twice, and yet still lives. The “Ka-tet,” four who are bound together by fate, must travel far in this novel encountering not only the poisonous waste lands and the ravaged city of Lud that lies beyond, but also the rage of a train that might be their only means of escape. The stunning Plume edition features full-color illustrations by Ned Dameron and is a collector’s item for years to come.

Standalone or series: The Dark Tower Book 3

How did I get this book: Bought

Format (e- or p-): Print

WARNING: Spoilers ahoy, baby.

DISCUSSION:

Picking up immediately after The Drawing of the Three, The Waste Lands follows Roland, Eddie and Susannah as they move from the treacherous beach of their drawing, to the woods and world beyond. They are now a tenuous ka-tet – or, in Roland’s speak, a group connected by the great wheel of destiny. They have a powerful bond, these three, sharing not only fate, but at times their thoughts, emotions, and even images. As the days pass, the bond between them grows ever-stronger – Susannah and Eddie’s relationship deepens, as does their skill as gunslingers in training. Under Roland’s harsh but fair tutelage, these two New Yorkers from different Whens learn about the cold steel that settles in one’s veins when it is time to fight.

As they head deeper into the woods and Mid-World beyond, the trio find one of the last great fabled Guardians – and, more importantly, they find the Beam. One of the supporting rods of energy, the Beam is a ley line of sorts, connecting two of twelve portals in a bisecting line across the great circle of all the worlds. And, at the intersection of all six beams lies the nexus of time and space and size itself: The Dark Tower. With a path to travel along (think of it as their very own sadistic version of the yellow brick road), the ka-tet makes their way deeper into Mid-World, and the Waste Lands that lie beyond. There’s just one small problem, hindering their journey.

Roland, the fabled last gunslinger of the line of Eld, is losing his mind.

Torn between two realities that cannot co-exist, Roland is tortured by his own impossibly warring consciousness: he remembers sacrificing Jake and letting the boy fall in his quest to catch the Man in Black; he remembers stopping Jack Mort before Mort killed Jake. It is a paradox, an impossibility, that consumes the Gunslinger in Mid-World – and by the same token, tortures young Jake Chambers who knows he should be dead but is somehow alive in New York City.

In order to make their way to the Dark Tower, Jake must walk from his world into Mid-World and join Roland’s ka-tet in full – though it will be no easy thing. Even once reunited, the group has to contend with the rotting corpse of a ruined city with warring factions so far gone in their fighting over the centuries they no longer remember what they are fighting for.

And waiting for them, at the edge of the Waste Lands, is a train – if they are brave enough, quick enough, and true enough to endure the journey.

The third book in Stephen King’s epic Dark Tower cycle, The Waste Lands has always been very near and dear to this reader’s heart. It is the book in which Roland atones – at least in part – for dropping Jake Chambers in The Gunslinger (book 1). It’s the book that shows us more of Roland’s crumbling, decaying, sickening world, and feel the true meaning of his mantra, “The world has moved on.” It is the book in which Eddie Dean struggles and learns to free himself from the fear and ghost of his manipulative older brother. It is the book in which Susannah embraces her true self – Detta, Odetta, and this new third woman that embodies them all.

But most of all, it’s the book in which we get young, wide-eyed Jake back to the path along the Beam… and it’s the book in which we meet a billybumbler named Oy.

I loved The Waste Lands when I first read it, many years ago, and it has since been my favorite volume of The Dark Tower series. I’m happy to say that so many years later, after re-reading the book once again, it remains my favorite. (At least… so far. The Wolves of the Calla gives The Waste Lands a run for its money.)

In my mind, The Waste Lands is broken into two parts: the part before Jake, Roland, Eddie and Susannah are united, and the part when the full ka-tet makes its way toward, through, and beyond the nightmare that is the City of Lud.

In the first part, we learn more about Eddie, Susannah and Jake as individuals. Eddie has shaken the monkey of heroin (mostly), but he is still haunted and plagued by insecurity. In this book, more than any other, Eddie seems incredibly young. Without the specter of his brother questioning and chiding his every move, Eddie must rely on something far more terrifying: himself. (Sidenote: I loved the glimpse we see of Eddie and Henry in the past, through Jake’s eyes. It’s a very different picture of his brother than Eddie paints in his head, and that new observation is an incredibly insightful one from Jake.) Quick to anger and to frustration, Eddie is surprisingly sensitive and soft-hearted – certainly, he’s the less self-assured one compared to wife, Susannah.

OH SUSANNAH. If there is a born gunslinger in the group, one who understands Roland’s battle rage, it’s Susannah Dean. More than once, Susannah saves the ka-tet’s bacon – with Mir/Shardik the bear and her husband’s life, with her voluntary (though no less horrific) besting of the sex oracle demon in the speaking circle to pull Jake through the worlds, to the city of Lud and her gunslinger instincts, to her memory of prime numbers.

One thing I love very much about this core group is that every single member plays a vital role in the group’s progression – without any one of them, the Dark Tower would be impossible. Eddie is necessary for his visions and ability to carve items from wood, Susannah for her memory and her viciousness, Roland for his obvious skill and centrality, Jake for his intuition and foresight, and Oy for his heart and loyalty. Seeing these characters come together and start to work together, to trust in each other – not that tenuous, frail trust that is based on survival and nothing more, seen in The Drawing of the Three – that’s no small thing. In fact, it’s really fucking awesome.

And it’s necessary, because Roland’s world? It’s all kinds of fucked up.

The first indication is the rotting, maggot-sneezing, android-Guardian-Bear, who nearly has Eddie’s hide. For the first time, we learn about a corporation (which we will hear about again and again) that has created these miracles of technology and magic – like the Guardian bear which would protect one end, one portal, one side of the Beam. (Mir’s counterpart is the Turtle, of enormous girth…who also plays a major role in King’s other books. It, I’m looking at you.)

The second indication is the city of Lud – a Mad Max-ish complete devolvement of human society and civilization. The backstory for Lud – a city once great and powerful, built on miracles of technology suspended by the Beam – is incredibly pessimistic and horrific in its scope. Lud falls in the aftermath of a prolonged war, and its inhabitants fight and torture and pillage for no reason other than the fact that they always have. The city is littered with corpses (that apparently smell of the cinnamon sugar that one would put on breakfast toast), and has been slowly driven mad – by fighting, by the menace of drums that play intermittently, by a sentient technology that no longer has any purpose but to cause chaos.

The third indication… well, this is where Charlie the Choo Choo, aka Blaine the Mono, comes in. (Sidenote: Jake’s essay in class, his stream of consciousness confession of what he knows to be true, is one of my favorite things. Not just because it’s hilarious that he gets an A for it, but because it is so inherently creepy.) Charlie the Choo Choo is one of those things that connects each of the three former New Yorkers – each one of them has interacted with the children’s book (probably the exact same book Jake brings with him) in some way in the past. And Charlie/Blaine is the ka-tet’s future.

Related

Thea James is half of the maniacal book review duo behind The Book Smugglers. By day, she does digital operations things over at Penguin Random House. By night, she watches an abundance of horror movies, stays up too late, and voraciously devours ALL THE SFF.

2 Comments

I love this book. Oy has got to be the cutest animal character since ever, and Blaine the Mono is just brilliant. Also, that Charlie the Choo Choo picture is so perfectly creepy!

jenmitch

November 18, 2015 at 8:14 pm

I know I’m late to the party on this one, but just in case you still read the comments here, I just wanted to say, THANK YOU SO MUCH for doing the dark tower re-read! I’m in the middle of book IV right now, and I wanted to post this here instead of that thread, since I don’t want to see any spoilers. Anyways, I picked up the first book about a month ago on a whim, and because I knew you’d recently done the re-reads. I was never interested in reading King before, but, I am soooooooo glad to be riding this train!! As always, your reviews/discussions are insightful and fun to read. I’ll just wait to read them until after I’m done with each book 🙂

Nonfiction Submissions

Kickstarter Level-Up: ACHIEVED

Shop Our Ebook Store

The Book Smugglers

noun
1 : a book review blog specializing in speculative fiction and popgeekery for all ages since 2008.
2 : a digital-first publisher of speculative fiction and nonfiction since 2014.
3 : 2017 Hugo Nominee for Best Semiprozine
4 : a duo of awesomely badass book nerds